Profile: Born on January 22, 1887 Carl Storck was a local football hero in Dayton, Ohio, staring
for St. Mary's College (now know as Dayton University), after graduating
Storck continued on a semi-pro team, with some other local players and college
teammates. They also organized a football team that won the city and Southern
Ohio championships in 1913.

Eventually this semipro team would get
sponsors and would dominate Ohio's football scene as the Dayton Triangles. Strock
would take over as the team's manager in 1918, and led them into the newly established
American Professional Football Association in 1920, a year late Strock
became the new league's treasurer.

While the APFA became the NFL
in 1922, Carl Storck serving as the league's treasurer also continued to run the
Dayton Triangles now coaching the team as well. Storck would coach the Triangles
until 1926. The Triangles would have trouble competing in the increasingly
competitive NFL, and Storck would eventual sell them in 1930, as they moved to
Brooklyn and became the Dodgers.

Storck would remain closely tied with
the NFL as the league's treasurer until 1939, when he became the President
of the NFL upon the death of Joseph Carr. He would serve the role on an interim
basis until a permanent President was found in April of 1941.